[BackupPC-users] Bare Metal Restore, Windows 7
Of course, BackupPC is well suited to backup and recovery of individual sets of files rather than complete systems. In the event of hardware media failure, I'd generally take it as an opportunity to start afresh with a new operating system, and recover just the user files. Recently I lost a drive on a system with a large number of proprietary drivers that had been updated over the years, and applying that plus all the necessary software would have been a daunting task, so I simply restored *everything* from BackuPC, following this procedure: http://www.goodjobsucking.com/?p=449 I'm happy to report that it works. While it may not always be an adequate substitute for an image backup, the system is back up and running and virtually indistinguishable from before its drive failed. -- BPM Camp - Free Virtual Workshop May 6th at 10am PDT/1PM EDT Develop your own process in accordance with the BPMN 2 standard Learn Process modeling best practices with Bonita BPM through live exercises http://www.bonitasoft.com/be-part-of-it/events/bpm-camp-virtual- event?utm_ source=Sourceforge_BPM_Camp_5_6_15utm_medium=emailutm_campaign=VA_SF ___ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List:https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki:http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/
Re: [BackupPC-users] How to manage disk space?
On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 4:57 PM, backu...@kosowsky.org wrote: Dave Sill wrote at about 15:28:49 -0400 on Monday, April 13, 2015: We've been using BackupPC for a couple years and have just encountered the problem of insufficient disk space on the server. I've tried searching the list archives for help, but haven't found what I'm looking for so far. What I'd like to know is (1) where is the disk space going, To store ayour backups and (2) how can adjust BackupPC to use less space? Save fewer backups or backup fewer machines But more specifically, a likely problem is that you have some very large files like databases, log files, virtual machine images or mailboxes that change daily and thus are not pooled. Even with rsync where only the differences are transferred, a complete copy is reconstructed and saved on the server and only files with exactly identical content can be pooled. Database and VM images generally need special handling to make sure they don't change while being copied, so you may want to exclude them from the backuppc run and use other tools for those files. -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com -- BPM Camp - Free Virtual Workshop May 6th at 10am PDT/1PM EDT Develop your own process in accordance with the BPMN 2 standard Learn Process modeling best practices with Bonita BPM through live exercises http://www.bonitasoft.com/be-part-of-it/events/bpm-camp-virtual- event?utm_ source=Sourceforge_BPM_Camp_5_6_15utm_medium=emailutm_campaign=VA_SF ___ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List:https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki:http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/
Re: [BackupPC-users] How to manage disk space?
Hi, Les Mikesell wrote on 2015-04-14 09:34:35 -0500 [Re: [BackupPC-users] How to manage disk space?]: On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 4:57 PM, backu...@kosowsky.org wrote: Dave Sill wrote at about 15:28:49 -0400 on Monday, April 13, 2015: We've been using BackupPC for a couple years and have just encountered the problem of insufficient disk space on the server. [...] What I'd like to know is (1) where is the disk space going, To store ayour backups and (2) how can adjust BackupPC to use less space? Save fewer backups or backup fewer machines Jeffrey has a point here. You don't give us much detail to guess on. A couple dozen Linux servers can mean just about anything. But more specifically, a likely problem is that you have some very large files like databases, log files, virtual machine images or mailboxes that change daily and thus are not pooled. That is one possibility. Another would be keeping several years worth of daily history of large mail servers. Either your history is too long (for the disk space available), or your backups are too large, or most likely a combination of both. Backups may be too large either by design (you need to backup too much data) or by malfunction (you are backing up something you don't mean to backup). Yet other possibilities would be that BackupPC_nightly is not running, or that linking is not working. Then again, you might have meant to ask, how do I find out where the disk space is going?. I can't think of a good answer to that. BackupPC's pooling mechanism means that if you have 100 copies of one file content (all linked to one pool file by BackupPC), deleting 99 of them won't save you anything, as long as one remains. Put differently, one host *might* seem very large in terms of total backup size, yet share all files with other seemingly smaller hosts. You really have to look at your source data: what are you backing up, how often does it change, how unique is it? And you have to know your constraints. If you *need* to keep a long history of a large amount of data, there is nothing much you can do (except from getting more disk space). If you don't, the easiest option is to expire old backups and see what happens - just keep in mind that you don't get back any disk space for content still present in more recent backups. Reducing the size of existing backups is somewhat tricky, and reducing the size of future backups won't gain you anything until the old backups expire. Actually, there might be a way to shed some light. I'd probably look for large files with a low link count (-links 2 or 3) in the pc/ tree. You need to be aware that 'find' will take a *long* time to traverse such a large pool. It just might be worthwhile to run a rather general 'find' command with output redirected to a file and then filter that repeatedly to narrow down your search, rather than running several different 'find' invocations. Or even looking in the {c,}pool/ rather than the pc/ tree (faster, but you don't get any file paths, just file content). Running 'find $topdir/pc/$host/$num -type f -links -3 -ls' should give you an approximate list of files that would actually be deleted by deleting [only] backup $num of host $host ('-links -3' takes into account files for some reason not linked into the pool; in theory, these *should* all be zero length, but in case of some malfunction, they might not). Much of that might not make any sense for your particular case, but I hope some of it helps. Regards, Holger -- BPM Camp - Free Virtual Workshop May 6th at 10am PDT/1PM EDT Develop your own process in accordance with the BPMN 2 standard Learn Process modeling best practices with Bonita BPM through live exercises http://www.bonitasoft.com/be-part-of-it/events/bpm-camp-virtual- event?utm_ source=Sourceforge_BPM_Camp_5_6_15utm_medium=emailutm_campaign=VA_SF ___ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List:https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki:http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/
[BackupPC-users] Backuppc and performance on Apache 2.4
Hi Guys, I've got a quick question about enabling mod_perl on Apache 2.4, as it is written on backupppc manual ( http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/faq/BackupPC.html#Step-9:-CGI-interface). Is it still valid that enabling this would affect performance so much, even on Apache 2.4, and backuppc 3.3.0? I've tried to enable mod_perl, as it was written in documentation, but I haven't even found BackupPC_Admin there. Cheers -- Michał Mizera -- BPM Camp - Free Virtual Workshop May 6th at 10am PDT/1PM EDT Develop your own process in accordance with the BPMN 2 standard Learn Process modeling best practices with Bonita BPM through live exercises http://www.bonitasoft.com/be-part-of-it/events/bpm-camp-virtual- event?utm_ source=Sourceforge_BPM_Camp_5_6_15utm_medium=emailutm_campaign=VA_SF___ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List:https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki:http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/